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Beilstein J. Nanotechnol. 2017, 8, 1844–1862, doi:10.3762/bjnano.8.186
Figure 1: Key steps for addressing cervical cancer as public health concern. New optical technologies and inn...
Figure 2: Cross-section of uterus and vagina; schematics of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia development.
Figure 3: Cervical cancer estimated incidence, mortality and prevalence worldwide in 2012. Adapted from [22].
Figure 4: Diffuse reflectance and/or fluorescence spectroscopy for the optical analysis of tissue; λ is a wav...
Figure 5: Reflectance colposcopic images (a) before and (b) after application of acetic acid; (c) reconstruct...
Figure 6: Site-to-site variations in fluorescence spectra measured at different pathologically confirmed (a) ...
Figure 7: Raman vibrational spectroscopy for probing the molecular chemical bonds as well as crystal lattice ...
Figure 8: Cervical epithelium examined using (i) colposcopy, (ii) confocal endomicroscopy and (iii) conventio...
Figure 9: Illustration of optical molecular-targeted imaging with nanoparticles.
Figure 10: Polarimetric images of a cervical specimen taken at 550 nm: (a) depolarization (b) scalar retardanc...
Figure 11: (a) Histological map (colored lines) superimposed on an RGB image of a conization sample; HPV: epit...
Figure 12: (a) OCT image of normal cervical tissue (BM: basement membrane, EP: epithelium, ST: stroma); (b) OC...